The Big Picture |
- Friday Night Soul: James Brown in Eighteen Minutes
- Succinct Summations of Week’s Events 8/8/14
- Structural Bull Market ?
- 10 Friday AM Reads
- Halfway through the Correction
- Economics Gurus Get Schooled at Camp Kotok
- Quant’s e-Sportlimousine: Electric Revolution
- Adjusted Employment to Population Ratio as an Indicator of Labor Market Strength
| Friday Night Soul: James Brown in Eighteen Minutes Posted: 08 Aug 2014 03:00 PM PDT "Get On Up" is the new biopic out on James Brown. David Remnick of the The New Yorker calls it “the second-best film ever made about James Brown.” But rather than watch a good impersonations, how about seeing the real thing? The following James Brown video has been called the “most thrilling, compressed, erotic, explosive form, just eighteen minutes long, and is also arguably the most electrifying performance in the history of postwar American music.” Quite a claim. Check it out:
Its no wonder that Jagger and Richards, watching from twenty feet away, grew nervous over the thought of following the hardest working man in show business.. On Film: The Invention of the Moonwalk (April 26th, 2014) See also: |
| Succinct Summations of Week’s Events 8/8/14 Posted: 08 Aug 2014 12:30 PM PDT Succinct Summations week ending August 8th Positives:
Negatives:
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| Posted: 08 Aug 2014 11:00 AM PDT
This morning, I made note of the difference between secular bull and bear markets. I described secular bear markets as being longer-term, characterized by strong rallies, vicious sell-offs and earnings contractions. Secular bull markets include an investor willingness to pay more and more for the same dollar of earnings even as stock prices rise. (I'll revisit this issue next week.) The simplest way to think of secular markets is as longer eras driven by overriding dynamics that define the period ether positively or negatively.
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| Posted: 08 Aug 2014 06:45 AM PDT My morning train reads (continues here):
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| Halfway through the Correction Posted: 08 Aug 2014 05:45 AM PDT Last month, we discussed how we might be on the verge of a correction. We also noted the futility of trying to time the start and finish of such events. What actually matters is how you react — or overreact. As my colleague Josh Brown has observed, "since the end of World War II (1945), there have been 27 corrections of 10 percent or more, versus only 12 full-blown bear markets (20 percent or worse)." However, the data show that the distribution of corrections isn’t smooth. Indeed, almost half (45 percent) of the corrections occurred either in the 1970s or the 2000s. Both eras were part of longer-term secular bear markets, characterized by strong rallies, vicious sell-offs and earnings contractions. It is noteworthy that almost half of the corrections occurred in two out of seven decades. I suspect this fact isn’t a coincidence. From a 30,000 foot view, it may be a key to understanding how likely a more severe correction might be.
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| Economics Gurus Get Schooled at Camp Kotok Posted: 08 Aug 2014 04:00 AM PDT Every summer, financial luminaries like Paul McCulley of PIMCO spend four days at Camp Kotok, an annual summer retreat in a remote part of Maine. |
| Quant’s e-Sportlimousine: Electric Revolution Posted: 08 Aug 2014 03:00 AM PDT ~~~ Video From Classic Driver:
Source: Classic Driver |
| Adjusted Employment to Population Ratio as an Indicator of Labor Market Strength Posted: 08 Aug 2014 02:00 AM PDT |
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